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AI, Automation, and the Future of Work: Experts Debate Impact on Jobs and Society
The rapid advancement of artificial intelligence and automation is sparking debate about the future of work, with some experts predicting widespread job displacement and others envisioning a world of abundance. Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla, predicted that within a couple of decades, work will be optional due to the proliferation of AI and automation. He envisioned a future where robots outnumber humans, providing healthcare and other services, eliminating the need for retirement savings, according to remarks made at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, earlier this month.
The potential for AI to reshape the job market has led to discussions about solutions like universal basic income. A UK minister called for universal basic income to cushion the blow from AI-related job losses, according to Fortune. This echoes OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's previous statements on the subject.
However, some leaders believe experience is invaluable. Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon, for example, has said experience trumps everything in business. In contrast, Ricardo Amper, the founder and CEO of the $1.25 billion software company Incode Technologies, argued that Gen Z's "naivety" is a professional blessing. "My belief is that coming out with a fresh mind, first principles, is important. That's why young people are particularly helpful in tech, because they're less biased," Amper told Fortune. "I think too much knowledge is actually bad in tech: you're biased." Amper founded social network company La Burbuja Networks in 2000.
Meanwhile, in the realm of AI development, one individual detailed their experience building an "opinionated and minimal coding agent" in a Hacker News post dated November 30, 2025. The author outlined the agent's minimal system prompt, toolset, and lack of built-in to-dos or plan mode.
In other news, astronomers have released the most ambitious cosmic map assembled so far, confirming that matter in the Universe is less clumpy than standard cosmological theory would predict, according to Nature News. The Dark Energy Survey observed around 150 million galaxies visible in Earth's southern sky.
Harvard University has recovered from institutional slips while a massive rallying of peer institutions fortified Harvard's defense from Trump administration attacks, which had paradoxical consequences beneficial to the Ivy League institution, according to Fortune.
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